Abstract

Liver homogenates from mice and from rabbits transfer glucose from UDP-[6-3H]glucose, at pH7.0, to oestradiol-17α, oestradiol-17β, oestradiol-17α 3-glucuronide, p-nitrophenol and diethylstilboestrol. In the rabbit the phenolic steroids were better substrates than p-nitrophenol for the glucosyltransferase, whereas the reverse was true in the mouse. At pH8.0, rabbit liver, but not mouse liver, transferred glucose to oestradiol-17α 3-glucuronide in better yield than that at pH7.0. Evidence is presented for the presence of two glucosyltransferases in rabbit liver. One of these has a pH optimum at about 8.0, and is highly specific for oestradiol-17α 3-glucuronide, whereas the other, which has a pH optimum at about 7.0, is similar in this respect to the transferase in mouse liver.